The Commercial Appeal

Apple unveils new iPad to be used for students

- Edward C. Baig USA TODAY

Apple CEO Tim Cook and other executives took the stage in an auditorium at Chicago’s Lane Tech College Prep High School on Tuesday and unveiled a new education-targeted $299, 9.7-inch iPad, with support for the Apple Pencil stylus that was once only reserved for its premium iPad Pro tablets.

Apple hopes this lowest-costever new iPad ever will appeal to students and educators. Sales of iPads have been fairly soft in recent years, and now Apple is looking to education to execute a turnaround.

The company’s last budget iPad cost $329 for the base model and was introduced about a year ago and helped engineer a small turnaround. Schools paid $299 for it.

Though the price of this new iPad is the same, the latest tablet is more powerful, with, among other features, an A10 Fusion chip that can handle augmented reality. Bonus: 200 GB of free iCloud storage.

There’s also the aforementi­oned support for $99 Apple Pencil, which students can use to draw or take notes with, including in the company’s Pages (word processing), Keynote (presentati­on) and Numbers (spreadshee­t) apps. Logitech will also be selling its own stylus that’s compatible with the new tablet for just $49.

Apple also emphasized a new third-party augmented reality apps, including an app that will let students virtually dissect a frog.

“There’s no doubt AR is going to change how this generation learns,” Apple executive Greg Joswiak said on stage.

Apple separately announced software for teachers, and renewed its push for the previously announced Everyone Can Code initiative­s and Swift Playground­s programmin­g language. Apple also launched a new initiative called Everyone Can Create, with a focus on skills in music, video, photograph­y and drawing.

While educators pay $299 for the new tablet, regular consumers can pick one up when it goes on sale later this week.

Apple sold 11.4 million iPads in the third quarter of 2017, compared with 9.9 million iPads during the same period a year earlier. It saw a slight uptick in the fourth quarter: 13.1 million versus 13 million.

Though once dominant in the classroom, Apple has slipped behind Google and Microsoft in recent years, which sell lower cost tablets and laptops that better fit tight school budgets.

Google’s cloud-based Chrome operating system at the core of inexpensiv­e Chromebook­s captured a 59.6 percent market share in K-12 mobile computing U.S. shipments during the fourth quarter of 2017, according to Futuresour­ce Consulting, with many of those models in the sub-$300 ballpark.

Notebooks and tablets that run Microsoft Windows ranked second, with a 25.6 percent share. Apple was third, with its iOS mobile operating system for iPads and iPhones, and MacOS laptops having 10.6 percent and 3.5 percent, market shares, respective­ly.

 ??  ?? Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks about a new, education-focused iPad Tuesday at Lane Technical College Prep High School in Chicago. CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks about a new, education-focused iPad Tuesday at Lane Technical College Prep High School in Chicago. CHARLES REX ARBOGAST/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States